“Contrasting dualities” is an oft-seen quality in Zhang's work, which often evinces maturity and calm that bely the artist’s years. The language and spiritual undertones of her work interweave the...
“Contrasting dualities” is an oft-seen quality in Zhang's work, which often evinces maturity and calm that bely the artist’s years. The language and spiritual undertones of her work interweave the characteristics of art from various epochs, engendering a tension that leaps into the viewer’s eye. Zhang is adept at using minimal lines and contours, yet her work often flouts the conventions of contemporary art, aiming to explore ways of underpinning contemporary forms within a classical sense of order.Of course, it is difficult to reconcile modern and classical understandings of line and contour. Contemporary abstraction encourages the use of brushstrokes and lines that highlight -- the purpose of their existence in a painting is that of visual manifestation itself. Whereas in the long history of classicism, this was not always the case. In classical art, lines and contour signify order -- just as Greek philosophers declared the universal elements of beauty to be order, and Augustine extolled the “imitation of a unified underlying order” as the highest aspiration of earthly life. In the wave of modernism that followed classicism, order collapsed and unity was fragmented -- as in Dostoevsky’s “polyphonic novels,” wherein the only internal order is expressed as a “fragmented whole.” In Bach’s compositions, one finds another source of such aesthetics, where order is fragmented into scattered forms, and through polyphonic melodies one discovers a form of non-uniform harmony.Zhang Peiyun’s work is informed by Augustine’s classical order and enlighted by Bach’s polyphonic structure. Extending from classic characteristics of “internal order” to modern “internal, but unified” expression, her work arrives at last at the contemporary, which is “neither internal or unified.” Bolstered by the evolution of varied implications of line and contour in painting, Zhang’s seemingly minimal work is imbued with a rich complexity. In her artistic practice, she does not limit herself to a single intellectual position. To her, each period’s sense of order in and of itself constitutes a different type of knowledge, while the perception of any sense of order must be based ultimately in love. Zhang believes what is truly important in art is not the rationality of order. Rather, it is how the artist intuitively expresses order and how the audience perceives that sense of order, which has been relegated to the realm of rationality. And thus, the premise of her show’s name becomes clear.